Hotel Triana Montalván
If you’re interested in Triana’s ceramics tradition, you’ll enjoy this old-meets-new hotel set in the former Montalván tile factory, which closed in 2012. The red-brick Neo-Mudéjar building stands impressively on a street that is named after, and still dominated by, the pottery industry. Inside, a warren of public spaces is quirkily adorned with recycled panels of antique azulejos—Andalucía’s distinctive decorative tiles. Spacious guestrooms in the architect-designed contemporary wing are decorated in blues and whites and feature tiled headboards in mismatched styles. There’s a good buffet breakfast in garden terrace, but the house restaurant is not as impressive as its setting.
If you’re interested in Triana’s ceramics tradition, you’ll enjoy this old-meets-new hotel set in the former Montalván tile factory, which closed in 2012. The red-brick Neo-Mudéjar building stands impressively on a street that is named after, and still dominated by, the pottery industry. Inside, a warren of public spaces is quirkily adorned with recycled panels of antique azulejos—Andalucía’s distinctive decorative tiles. Spacious guestrooms in the architect-designed contemporary wing are decorated in blues and whites and feature tiled headboards in mismatched styles. There’s a good buffet breakfast in garden terrace, but the house restaurant is not as impressive as its setting.







